Mom is finally selling houses! Problem is she isn’t licensed. No big whoop for her, the test will be a breeze! Except she freaks when she meets Kim, a mega realtor who’s sold 358 houses and is getting recertified. She walks out of the test, assuaging her failure with a Chipwitch. Mmmm…now that’s something I can get behind: Chipwitch and a mostly Mom-centric episode.

With Seattle’s status as a hub for major technology companies like Amazon and Microsoft (and nationally-broadcast TV shows like Top Chef), the famously liberal city might soon become a hotbed of cyborg apartheid, as nerds begin to augment themselves with Google Glass, while restaurateurs begin turning them away from their establishments, muttering “We don’t serve any of your kind around here, especially if you’re going to be staring at your food while your glasses take photos of it.”

What’s next? Water fountains labeled “Cyborgs Only?” Cyborgs relegated to sitting in the back of the bus, because bus drivers don’t want to be Instagrammed? Segregated schools for cyborgs? This is a dangerous door you’re opening here, Google; even though, as you said in a statement, some businesses might “not to be as ready for their product as others.”

“It is still very early days for Glass, and we expect that as with other new technologies, such as cell phones, behaviors and social norms will develop over time,” they continued. Google — it’s been nearly a hundred and fifty years since slavery ended and we’re still nowhere near racial harmony. What makes you think that cyborgs will fare better?